2014 Innovative Short Fiction Contest

2014 Innovative Short Fiction ContestContest Judge: Manuel Gonzales, author of The Miniature WifePrize: $500, publication, copies of the issue, and a copy of the judge's book

Contest Results

Congratulations to the winning author, Tom Howard! His story, "American Rag Story," was selected by Manuel Gonzales. Manuel noted that this piece was "funny and tragic and formally interesting," and he also liked that "it didn't take itself too seriously." Tom Howard's work has appeared recently in ARDOR, Storm Cellar, Quarter After Eight, Digital Americana and elsewhere. He lives with his wife in Arlington, Virginia. Tom will receive a $500 prize, copies of the issue, a copy of Manuel's book, and the winning story will be published in the next issue of The Conium Review, due out later in 2014.

The Conium Review editorial staff thanks everybody who submitted and supported this contest. We look forward to announcing next year's judge soon, and we hope many of you will consider submitting again in 2015.

Contest Guidelines

The 2014 Innovative Short Fiction contest has ended, and Manuel Gonzales has selected the winner. Check this page regularly, or sign up for our newsletter to get information on the 2015 installment.

About The ContestThe winning story will be published in The Conium Review's next issue. The winning author will receive $500, five copies of the issue, and a copy of the judge's latest book.

Innovative short fiction should take risks that pay off. Don’t tell us a story we’ve already heard before. Show us something new with your subject, style, or characters. Make sure your writing has a "wow" factor.

This year’s contest judge is Manuel Gonzales. Manuel the author of The Miniature Wife (Riverhead Books, 2013), and he is the executive director of the Austin Bat Cave, a nonprofit creative writing center for children. If you are a family member, coworker, or student of the judge, you are ineligible for this contest.

Contest DeadlinesSubmissions must be received between December 15th, 2013 and March 15th, 2014. Everybody who submits to the contest receives a free digital download of the issue. All submissions must include a $15.00 entry fee. The winner will be announced by May 30th, 2014. If no winner is selected, all entry fees will be refunded.

In the "Biography Statement" field, please include a two or three sentence third-person bio. This bio will not be viewable by the contest judge. If you win the contest, your bio appears inside the published issue of The Conium Review along with the winning story.

Submissions must be unpublished, original work. Simultaneous submissions are allowed, but you must withdraw your story immediately if it is accepted elsewhere.

This contest abides by the Council of Literary Magazines & Presses code of ethics. Thank you for submitting!

About the 2014 Contest Judge

His fiction and nonfiction has appeared in One Story Magazine, the Awl, esquire.com, McSweeney’s Quarterly Review, Open City, Fence, i09.com, FiveChapters.com, and in the collection of essays, Man with a Pan (Algonquin Books, 2011). Manuel has taught creative writing for at Gotham Writer’s Workshop and elsewhere.

He is the current executive director of Austin Bat Cave, a creative writing and tutoring center for children six to eighteen years old. Manuel earned his MFA in Creative Writing from Columbia University.

"This book has everything you could ask for in a collection, and even things you hadn’t thought to ask for, but secretly wanted: unicorns, mobsters, swamp monsters and werewolves. Manuel Gonzales weaves the supernatural into the lives of everyday citizens, from anthropologists to airline passengers, and the result is pure magic mixed with humor and deep humanity." --Hannah Tinti, author of The Good Thief

"Lucid and confident . . . because his prose is never sloppy and his rhythm is impeccable, Gonzales's sentences unfold with an unusual smoothness . . . these stories showcase an exciting new voice . . . [they] ring and resound." --Aimee Bender, author of The Color Master

"Manuel Gonzales's The Miniature Wife is a marvel—a beautiful, hilarious and moving reinvention of the gothic, a testimony to the sublime powers of the imagination and language. This a book of extraordinary joy, compassion, horror and grace all rolled into one." --Dinaw Mengestu, author of How to Read the Air and The Beautiful Things that Heaven Bears

"Dark, smart and strange in a way that initially had me grasping for comparison but that ultimately revealed itself to be something new." --Charles Yu, author of How to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe